1. Safe disposal of diisopropyl fluorophosphate (DFP).
- Author
-
Lunn G and Sansone EB
- Subjects
- Buffers, Chymotrypsin chemistry, Hydrolysis, Isoflurophate toxicity, Mutagenicity Tests, Salmonella typhimurium drug effects, Salmonella typhimurium genetics, Solvents chemistry, Spectrophotometry, Ultraviolet, Tyrosine analogs & derivatives, Tyrosine metabolism, Isoflurophate chemistry, Sodium Hydroxide chemistry, Waste Disposal, Fluid standards
- Abstract
Diisopropyl fluorophosphate (DFP), a volatile highly toxic enzyme inhibitor, in buffer (pH 3, pH 5, pH 7, pH 9, pH 11, Hank's, Dulbecco's, PBS, TBE, and HEPES) or water (10 mM), in DMF solution (200 mM), and bulk quantities can be degraded by adding 1M NaOH. The DFP was completely degraded, as determined by enzymatic assay, and the final reaction mixtures were not mutagenic.
- Published
- 1994
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